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De minimis crackdown puts pressure on UPS’ cross-border business

The challenges: UPS’ turnaround remains in the early innings due to structural inefficiencies, operational missteps, and mounting macroeconomic headwinds.

The details:

  • One of the biggest hits came from the recently implemented “de minimis” tariffs on low-value Chinese imports, which triggered a sharp 35% drop in average daily volume between the US and China—worse than UPS had expected—as consumers pulled back spending on platforms like Temu and Shein.
  • A misstep came from UPS’ decision to walk away from its partnership with the US Postal Service, which had previously handled costly last-mile deliveries. Taking that function in-house proved more expensive than anticipated, prompting UPS to reopen talks with USPS to reinstate some form of collaboration.
  • To compound matters, broader economic volatility is making it harder to plan ahead. The company cited that uncertainty in its decision to withhold earnings guidance.

The numbers:

  • Non-GAAP adjusted EPS came in at $1.55, down 13.4% YoY and slightly below analysts’ estimate of $1.57.
  • Revenues dropped 2.7% to $21.22 billion, though that beat expectations of $20.85 billion.
  • Domestic revenues dipped 0.8% to $14.08 billion, driven by softer demand.
  • Average daily domestic package volume fell 7.3% to 16.6 million.

Our take: UPS is tightening its belt in preparation for leaner times. The company is actively trying to streamline operations—planning to shutter up to 10% of its buildings, downsize its fleet, and reduce its US workforce to better align with leaner volumes. It’s also trimming low-margin business, notably cutting back on Amazon deliveries, which made up as much as 11.8% of its total revenues last year, in an effort to prioritize more profitable shipments.

Still, with demand under pressure and cost headwinds mounting, stabilizing performance will be an uphill climb.

This content is part of EMARKETER’s subscription Briefings, where we pair daily updates with data and analysis from forecasts and research reports. Our Briefings prepare you to start your day informed, to provide critical insights in an important meeting, and to understand the context of what’s happening in your industry. Non-clients can click here to get a demo of our full platform and coverage.

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